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So, I spent Columbus Day weekend writing ballads. Or, at least, browsing around in books of ballads, singing and strumming away at them badly, and trying to think my way through their strange plot . . . . Continue Reading »

Christmas has devoured Advent, gobbled it up with the turkey giblets and the goblets of seasonal ale. Every secularized holiday, of course, tends to lose the context it had in the liturgical year. . . . . Continue Reading »

Thanksgiving was always tense while I was growing up, and I dont know why. Christmas, now¯Christmas was mostly fun and presents and carols and laughter, as I remember. But Thanksgiving was . . . . Continue Reading »

Small towns have been in the news lately. The past election featured them often. Barack Obama commented on the bitterness of those who cling to guns and religion. Sarah Palin and the McCain campaign . . . . Continue Reading »

After losing his Glasgow-Govan parliamentary seat in the 1992 General Election, Scottish National Party politician Jim Sillars condemned Scotland as a country of Ninety-Minute Patriots, . . . . Continue Reading »

G.K. Chesterton was a sucker for romantic gestures. Lines of soldiers with swords crossed, flags rippling in the wind, cathedral bells tolling: These sorts of scenes moved him, as did visions of . . . . Continue Reading »

Note : Due to an editing error, this article has been modified since originally posted. Gnosticism may not be the right word for it, but it is what Harold Bloom in The American Religion . . . . Continue Reading »

The Day the Earth Stood Still , a remake of the 1951 black and white movie classic of the same title, will be released December 12. I cant wait to see it. A emissary from the galactic . . . . Continue Reading »

Ronald was staring with wild incomprehension at the toaster, which was stubbornly refusing to relinquish the toast. This sentence, from British writer Alice Thomas Ellis 1990 novel, The Inn at . . . . Continue Reading »

Healthcare institutions owned and operated by the Catholic Church are, and always have been, an important component of the nations healthcare infrastructure. By 1872, there were seventy-five . . . . Continue Reading »